Education
Dublin graduated from Harvard College with a Bachelor of Arts in chemistry, and received his Doctor of Philosophy from Columbia University.
Dublin graduated from Harvard College with a Bachelor of Arts in chemistry, and received his Doctor of Philosophy from Columbia University.
He is a social historian specialized in the working-class experience in the United States, particularly throughout New England and the Mid-Atlantic states. He serves as a Distinguished Professor of History at Binghamton University.
Thomas Dublin, Walter Licht (2005). The face of decline: the Pennsylvania anthracite region in the twentieth century. Cornell University Press.
. When the mines closed: stories of struggles in hard times. Cornell University Press. 1998. . Transforming women's work: New England lives in the industrial revolution.
Cornell University Press. 1994. . Women at work: the transformation of work and community in Lowell, Massachusetts, 1826-1860. Columbia University Press.
1981. . Thomas Dublin, ed. (1996). Becoming American, becoming ethnic: college students explore their roots. Temple University Press.
. Thomas Dublin, ed. (1993). Immigrant voices: new lives in America, 1773-1986. University of Illinois Press.
. Thomas Dublin, ed. (1993). Farm to factory: women's letters, 1830-1860. Columbia University Press.
. Kathryn Kish Sklar, Thomas Dublin, eds. (1991). Women and Power in American History: To 1880. Prentice Hall. .